On Tue, 22 Nov 2016, Marc Haber wrote:

On Tue, Nov 22, 2016 at 06:50:35AM -0800, David Lang wrote:
On Tue, 22 Nov 2016, Marc Haber wrote:
As I noted earlier, most current switches don't have this limit. But older
switches (and many current switches in their default startup mode) have a
limit. On some of them it's 0..15, on others it's 0..31, etc. This was
common even on commercial switches 5-10 years ago, but the advance of
technology means that in most cases it's a matter of flipping a toggle in
the config to support all 4K VLANS.

Commercial Switches (for example the HP 25**, 28** devices) had a
limit on number of VLANs (I think it was 32 out of the box, I
increased that first thing after unpacking), but never a limit on the
range of VLAN IDs. You could have VLANs 1, 250, 100, 3847, but not
more than 32 of them in the default settings.

it depends on how far back you go :-)

Take a look at the WNDR3800, it's getting old, but that means it's cheap on
e-bay :-)

It's cheap if you Ebay it in the US. In Europe, it most likely was
never on the market, Ebay Germany does only have a single offer with a
price of well over 80 Euros.

That's interesting, the last time I ordered a batch, a good number of them that I received were the CH model (china), which needed a different firmware image, but otherwise worked identically

<$25 with free shipping

http://www.ebay.com/itm/NETGEAR-WIRELESS-N-ROUTER-N600-WNDR3800-DUALBAND-PREMIUM-EDITION-/272438727238?hash=item3f6e9d1246:g:JJ8AAOSwl9BWLeAG

David Lang
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